Gee, it's shocking that pcAnywhere would discourage the use of VNC. I wonder if Microsoft discourages the use of Linux. ;)
-Sam At 11:38 AM 4/3/2002 -0500, you wrote: >The Virus Software that I use at my site, which spans from Norton V 5.0 >to Norton 2002 on Win 9x/NT/2k/XCP, has never identified VNC as a virus. > >I have had PC Anywhere 10.x inform me that it does not recommend using >VNC and that we should uninstall it. But we use PC Anywhere for our >users to dial in on and VNC for our Help Desk, so we just ignore that >message. > >I'd be interested in knowing the exact version of the A/V software, the >OS and what other incidental add-ons for VNC you might have installed. >Perhaps one of them has some "virus like" code. > >[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > > > This is really kind of bad news that Anti-virus vendors are classifying > > VNC as a Trojan. It then becomes difficult to know if your VNC > > installation has been replaced by a real Trojan or is infected by a > > real virus. No answers for this problem, just an observation. > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > > To unsubscribe, mail [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the line: > > 'unsubscribe vnc-list' in the message BODY > > See also: http://www.uk.research.att.com/vnc/intouch.html > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- >--------------------------------------------------------------------- >To unsubscribe, mail [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the line: >'unsubscribe vnc-list' in the message BODY >See also: http://www.uk.research.att.com/vnc/intouch.html >--------------------------------------------------------------------- --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, mail [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the line: 'unsubscribe vnc-list' in the message BODY See also: http://www.uk.research.att.com/vnc/intouch.html ---------------------------------------------------------------------